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Query: UMLS:C0002986 (Fabry)
5,646 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The results of kidney transplantation in a variety of renal diseases have been analyzed. The diseases causing end-stage kidney failure in recipients were Alport syndrome, amyloidosis, cystinosis, diabetes mellitus, Fabry disease, familial nephritis, gout, medullary cystic disease, oxalosis, and systemic lupus erythematosus. The data indicate that renal transplantation is justifiable and parallels functional results for the more common causes of end-stage renal disease in all but Fabry disease and oxalosis. Although Fabry disease did not recur in any grafted kidney, only three patients have a functioning graft one year after transplantation. From a group of ten patients with oxalosis who received a total of 14 kidneys, only one survives. In no other metabolic disease, except one instance of primary amyloidosis, did the metabolic disease notably affect the transplant as it did in oxalosis.
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PMID:Renal transplantation in congenital and metabolic diseases. A report from the ASC/NIH renal transplant registry. 80 49

Little information is available concerning hereditary renal disease in the Irish population. We studied the prevalence and types of hereditary renal disease that lead to end stage renal failure by looking at the underlying hereditary disease in our dialysis populations and in all patients transplanted at the national unit. Twenty eight (15.7%) of 178 dialysis patients had hereditary renal disease with a mean age of 31 years (range nine to 65), and a male to female ratio of 1.54:1. Eighty-nine of 842 patients (10.3%) with renal transplants had hereditary renal disease with a male to female ratio of 1.63:1. The commonest entity was autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (68% in dialysis patients, 64% in transplants), and the next most frequent was Alport's syndrome (21.4%, 16.9%). Nephronophthisis was the third most common problem (10.7%, 10.1%) followed by hereditary non-Alport's nephritis, Fabry's disease, cystinosis and familial interstitial nephritis. The high prevalence of hereditary renal disease among the dialysis and renal transplant population emphasises the need for proper registration of the nature of renal disease in this group, and for a comprehensive genetic counselling service in this country.
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PMID:Prevalence of hereditary renal disease. 236 28

A 26-year-old female patient was admitted to the hospital because of fever of unknown origin and renal failure. Diagnosis of Fabry's disease, extracapillary proliferative (crescentic) glomerulonephritis and granulomatous interstitial nephritis was made by histological, immunohistochemical and electron microscopical diagnosis in a kidney biopsy and confirmed by further investigations. Years ago the brother of the patient had a kidney biopsy diagnosed as metabolic disease. The re-evaluation of this biopsy confirmed Fabry's disease while in this patient an association with tubulointerstitial nephritis occurred. To our knowledge this is the first family with two members having Fabry's disease combined with further kidney diseases.
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PMID:[Fabry's disease, glomerulonephritis with crescentic and granulomatous interstitial nephritis. Case of one family]. 1460 48